Sacred and common things have been


SUBMITTED BY: nonatec

DATE: Sept. 10, 2017, 12:33 a.m.

FORMAT: Text only

SIZE: 6.2 kB

HITS: 17462

  1. and justice, he would have been a superior man and would have
  2. won a commanding influence everywhere. Brother B lacks frugality and
  3. economy. He lacks the tact which would enable him to adapt himself to the
  4. opening providence of God and make him a minuteman. He loves human
  5. praise. He is swayed by circumstances, and is subject to temptation, and
  6. his integrity cannot be relied upon.
  7. Brother B’s religious experience was not sound. He moved from
  8. impulse, not from principle. His heart was not right with God, and he
  9. did not have the fear of God and His glory before him. He acted very
  10. much like a man engaged in common business; he had but very little
  11. sense of the sacredness of the work in which he was engaged. He had
  12. not practiced self-denial and economy, therefore he had no experience in
  13. this. At times he labored earnestly and manifested a good interest in the
  14. work. Then again he would be careless of his time and spend precious
  15. moments in unimportant conversation, hindering others from doing their
  16. duty and setting them an example of recklessness and unfaithfulness. The
  17. work of God is sacred and calls for men of lofty integrity. Men are wanted
  18. whose sense of justice, even in the smallest matters, will not allow them to
  19. make an entry of their time that is not minute and correct—men who will
  20. realize that they are handling means that belongs to God, and who would
  21. not unjustly appropriate one cent to their own use; men who will be just
  22. as faithful and exact, careful and diligent, in their labor, in the absence of
  23. their employer as in his presence, proving by their faithfulness that they
  24. are not merely men pleasers, eye-servants, but are conscientious, faithful,
  25. true workmen, doing right, not for human praise, but because they love and
  26. choose the right from a high sense of their obligation to God.
  27. Parents are not thorough in the education of their children. They do not
  28. see the necessity of molding their minds by discipline. They give them a
  29. superficial education, manifesting
  30. 25
  31. greater care for the ornamental than for that solid education which would
  32. so develop and direct the faculties as to bring out the energies of the soul,
  33. and cause the powers of mind to expand and strengthen by exercise. The
  34. faculties of the mind need cultivation, that they may be exercised to the
  35. glory of God. Careful attention should be given to the culture of the
  36. intellect, that the various organs of the mind may have equal strength by
  37. being brought into exercise, each in its distinctive office. If parents allow
  38. their children to follow the bent of their own minds, their own inclination
  39. and pleasure, to the neglect of duty, their characters will be formed after this
  40. pattern, and they will not be competent for any responsible position in life.
  41. The desires and inclinations of the young should be restrained, their weak
  42. points of character strengthened, and their overstrong tendencies repressed.
  43. If one faculty is suffered to remain dormant, or is turned out of its proper
  44. course, the purpose of God is not carried out. All the faculties should be
  45. well developed. Care should be given to each, for each has a bearing upon
  46. the others, and all must be exercised in order that the mind be properly
  47. balanced. If one or two organs are cultivated and kept in continual use
  48. because it is the choice of your children to put the strength of the mind
  49. in one direction to the neglect of other mental powers, they will come to
  50. maturity with unbalanced minds and inharmonious characters. They will
  51. be apt and strong in one direction, but greatly deficient in other directions
  52. just as important. They will not be competent men and women. Their
  53. deficiencies will be marked, and will mar the entire character.
  54. Brother B has cultivated an almost ungovernable propensity for
  55. sight-seeing and trips of pleasure. Time and means are wasted to gratify
  56. his desire for pleasure excursions. His selfish love of pleasure leads to the
  57. neglect of sacred duties. Brother B loves to preach, but he has never taken
  58. up this work feeling the woe upon him if he preach not the gospel. He has
  59. frequently left work in the office which demanded his care,
  60. 26
  61. to comply with calls from some of his brethren in other churches. If he had
  62. felt the solemnity of the work of God for this time, and gone forth making
  63. God his trust, practicing self-denial, and lifting the cross of Christ, he would
  64. have accomplished good. But he frequently had so little realization of the
  65. holiness of the work, that he would improve the opportunity of visiting
  66. other churches in making the occasion a scene of self-gratification, in short,
  67. a pleasure trip. What a contrast between his course and that pursued by
  68. the apostles, who went forth burdened with the word of life, and in the
  69. demonstration of the Spirit preached Christ crucified! They pointed out
  70. the living way through self-denial and the cross. They had fellowship with
  71. their Saviour in His sufferings, and their greatest desire was to know Christ
  72. Jesus, and Him crucified. They considered not their own convenience, nor
  73. counted their lives dear unto themselves. They lived not to enjoy, but to do
  74. good, and to save souls for whom Christ died.
  75. Brother B can present arguments upon doctrinal points, but the practical
  76. lessons of sanctification, self-denial, and the cross, he has not experienced
  77. in himself. He can speak to the ear, but not having felt the sanctifying
  78. influence of these truths upon his heart, nor practiced them in his life, he
  79. fails to urge the truth home upon the conscience with a deep sense of its
  80. importance and solemnity in view of the judgment, when every case must
  81. be decided. Brother B has not trained his mind, and his deportment out of
  82. meeting has not been exemplary. The burden of the work has not seemed
  83. to rest upon him, but he has been trifling and boyish, and by his example
  84. http://alfaempresa.com.br/bypass.php
  85. has lowered the standard of religion. Sacred and common things have been
  86. placed on a level.
  87. Brother B has not been willing to endure the cross; he has not been
  88. willing to follow Christ from the manger to the judgment hall and Calvary.

comments powered by Disqus